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  • Polish Goulash

    G'Day Guys!

    This is my mother's own Polish Goulash recipe. We reckon it leaves any Hungarian Goulash for dead. Try it, and post your reviews here. We Poles are a thick-skinned lot so we can take criticism!

    The flavor sensations are sublime, yet it contains virtually no grease so could not be more healthy for us!

    POLISH GOULASH

    Ingredients

    3 large onions, finely chopped
    4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
    2 bell peppers, roughly chopped
    3 hot chiles, finely chopped
    1½kg (3lbs) gravy beef, or meat of choice
    375ml (1½ cups) dry red cooking wine
    2 cups tomato juice (home-made if possible)
    1 cup dried mushrooms
    Maggi seasoning to taste
    freshly‑ground black pepper
    1 tbsp all-purpose flour
    olive oil
    butter
    2 or 3 bay leaves
    1 small leek
    2 sticks of celery
    few sprigs of parsley
    1 tsp soy sauce (optional)
    rock or sea salt
    2 tsp chicken booster (optional)
    2 tsp beef booster (optional)
    2 tsp cornstarch (cornflour)

    Method

    The night before you want to make this recipe soak the mushrooms in cold water (Cepes and Bolets are the very best but regular ones are OK - fresh mushrooms have a different texture and are not as good in this recipe). The next day carefully strain off the water through a fine sieve and retain. Rinse the mushrooms well several times to remove any sand that may be lurking.

    Add the oil and butter to a large frypan. Sauté the onions until transparent then add the garlic. Wash the meat well, dry it, cut off the fat and dice it into bite-sized chunks. Add to the frypan with the onions and garlic and bay leaves and cook on high heat, stirring regularly, until all the liquid has evaporated and the meat is slightly browned.

    Add the tomato juice, wine, strained mushroom water, bell peppers, hot chiles, the re-hydrated mushrooms, chicken and beef booster, black pepper, soy sauce, Maggi seasoning and salt. Cook until boiling point is reached.

    Tie up the parsley sprigs and leeks and add to the bottom of a crock pot with the celery sticks. Pour the contents of the frypan into the crock pot and cook on high for two to three hours until done, stirring regularly (if you do not have a crock pot simmer on the stove until ready). When the meat is tender it is ready. Remove the parsley, leeks and celery sticks. Very importantly, taste the sauce to see if it has the right balance and, if necessary, adjust the seasoning or add more Maggi seasoning etc. Finally, mix the all-purpose flour and cornstarch to a paste with some of the juices from the crockpot and stir it in well. Bring to boiling point again to thicken it and the goulash is ready. Serve by itself or over hot pasta, steamed or boiled potatoes, cooked rice or even couscous if desired. Delicious! You will find that this dish not only tastes fantastic but rich too. It isn’t! There is virtually not a scrap of fat in this recipe so it will not clog up the old arteries; all the more reason to partake of it regularly and copiously! LOL

    Note: Other cuts of meat which go well in this recipe are shoulder cuts of beef, lamb, venison, antelope, elk, moose and goat. When this dish is prepared using venison or antelope it comes out fantastic and the meat has a flavor all its own which is in no way strong.

    If you do not have access to home-grown tomatoes use canned Italian or Greek peeled tomatoes and pass them through a sieve to remove the seeds.

    Maggi seasoning is a vegetable extract concentrate made in Asia these days. It is available in supermarkets Down Under but in North America and Europe may be sold thru specialty shops such as delis, fine butcher shops, specialty food stores etc. It is worth searching for as it is a terrific flavor enhancer.
    Happiness is being with the love of your life. If you can't have that, then an unlimited supply of well-rotted manure is a pretty close second!

  • #2
    Feeds a dozen?
    Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.

    www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Flummery View Post
      Feeds a dozen?
      Something like that...
      It's great served with creamy mashed tatties or crushed barley

      Comment


      • #4
        POLISH GOULASH

        Ingredients

        3 large onions, finely chopped
        4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
        2 bell peppers, roughly chopped
        3 hot chiles, finely chopped
        1½kg (3lbs) gravy beef, or meat of choice
        375ml (1½ cups) dry red cooking wine
        2 cups tomato juice (home-made if possible)
        1 cup dried mushrooms
        Maggi seasoning to taste
        freshly‑ground black pepper
        1 tbsp all-purpose flour
        olive oil
        butter
        2 or 3 bay leaves
        1 small leek
        2 sticks of celery
        few sprigs of parsley
        1 tsp soy sauce (optional)
        rock or sea salt
        2 tsp chicken booster (optional)
        2 tsp beef booster (optional)
        2 tsp cornstarch (cornflour)


        What is chicken booster please?
        Last edited by trish60; 27-03-2010, 11:04 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Janek View Post
          G'Day Guys!


          Maggi seasoning is a vegetable extract concentrate made in Asia these days. It is available in supermarkets Down Under but in North America and Europe may be sold thru specialty shops such as delis, fine butcher shops, specialty food stores etc. It is worth searching for as it is a terrific flavor enhancer.
          just for info, Maggi is a Swiss company - Julius Maggi invented dehydrated soup in 1884 - he was asked to find a solution to the problems of malnutrition during the industrial revolution when women left the countryside to work in factories and didn't have the resources to cook as before.

          So, I think we can get Maggi seasoning made in Europe.
          It sounds very delicious and healthy!
          Last edited by Patchninja; 27-03-2010, 06:11 PM. Reason: Forgot to say how delish it sounds!

          Comment


          • #6
            Hi is gravy beef- casserole /braising steak? Sounds like a really good pan full!

            Comment


            • #7
              Trish I was wondering about chicken booster too
              Gravox Chicken Booster from Cerebos Foodservice

              Seems like an OZ thing!

              I think Knorr do a range of concentrated liquid stock in little brown bottles - that could be used.
              Last edited by Jeanied; 28-03-2010, 12:14 PM.
              Whooops - now what are the dogs getting up to?

              Comment


              • #8
                G'Day All - Gravy beef is the name given to 'shin of beef' which is the name it was marketed as more than 50 years ago, until the beef industry decided to change its name to Gravy Beef. Any braising or casserole cut of beef is what you want for this dish, the ones that require long, slow cooking - that melt in your mouth.

                Chicken booster is freely available Down Under. It is labelled as chicken powdered stock. If you can't get it in the UK don't worry as it isn't an essential ingredient in the dish.

                Janek
                Happiness is being with the love of your life. If you can't have that, then an unlimited supply of well-rotted manure is a pretty close second!

                Comment

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